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Josh Shachar
Chief Innovation Officer, Sensor-Kinesis CorporationDirectory:
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Josh Shachar has been involved in advanced technologies for the Department of Defense for over 20 years. Mr. Shachar has held many executive management positions at high-technology companies dealing directly with the United States Department of Defense.
Mr. Shachar began his professional career in 1981 at ThermoControl, Inc. in Chatsworth, California, as the founder and Vice President of Engineering. This company was acquired by Daily Instrument of Houston, Texas. In 1996, Mr. Shachar served as the Vice President of Engineering at Pastushin Aviation, Inc. In the following year, Mr. Shachar founded and served as the President of Lambda Signatics, Inc., which was later acquired by Shapco Industries.
Mr. Shachar is still the principal owner and founder of numerous high-technology companies including ThermoCouple America LLC, EDEL Engineering Development Corp., and Engineered Magnetics, Inc.
Mr. Shachar is an author of numerous U.S. Patent applications in medical, biometrics and diagnostic applications.
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Thomas Chen
Chief Neurosurgeon Officer, Sensor-Kinesis CorporationDirectory:
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Dr. Thomas Chen is a physician, a board certified neurosurgeon, and the Director of Surgical Neuro-oncology at USC. He is highly recognized for his skills as a neurosurgeon, and is also a tenured Professor of Neurosurgery and Pathology at USC.
Dr. Chen graduated summa cum laude in three years from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he also received Bronze Tablet honors (top 3% of undergraduate students) and was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa national academic honor society. He then attended the University of California, San Francisco, where he was inducted into the Alpha Omega Alpha national medical honor society. Afterward, he underwent neurosurgery training at the University of Southern California (“USC”).
In order to prepare for his career in neuro-oncology, Dr. Chen also obtained a Ph.D. degree in pathobiology. His thesis was on the role of immunotherapy in malignant brain tumors. He is also a fellowship-trained spine surgeon and one of a few surgical neuro-oncologists in the country who specialize in spine cancer surgery.
Currently, Dr. Chen maintains a busy clinical practice in both surgical neuro-oncology and spine surgery. He heads a research laboratory focused on glioma biology.
Dr. Chen has published extensively on glioma biology and neurosurgery. He is on the editorial board for The Spine Journal and Journal of Neuro-oncology, and is on the review board for Neurosurgery and Journal of Neurosurgery. He is on numerous national neurosurgery committees.
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Frank Adell
President and CEO, Sensor-Kinesis CorporationDirectory:
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Frank Adell is a successful entrepreneur and business leader with over 30-years of experience in strategic planning.
As CEO, Mr. Adell has led several high-tech startup companies to IPOs and commercial success. His forte is in building early stage organizational structures in order to attract early seed investment money, and to fund subsequent rounds of share issues as each milestone is met.
As a consultant, Mr. Adell has helped transform many high tech startup companies into Fortune 500 companies, including GE, Intel, Pfizer, Merck, and Bristol-Myers-Squibb.
Frank is the recipient of the 2007 Congressional Order of Merit and is a member of the 2006 Business Advisory Board of the National Republican Congressional Committee. He received a Congressional Medal of Distinction from President George W. Bush in 2008 at the President’s Dinner in Washington, D.C., and has worked with numerous government agencies, including the State Department and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). In 1996, Frank received a letter of recognition from the FAA on behalf of President Clinton for his contributions to the security of the airline industry.
His professional career began in 1980 as a nuclear engineer at Bechtel Corporation after receiving a Bachelor of Science degree with emphasis in Nuclear Engineering from the University of Washington in Seattle.
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Tests for cancer are almost never painful because we use anesthetics; local anesthetics, which freeze the skin and underlying tissue in order to access the biopsy painlessly.
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A biopsy is a procedure that involves removing a small sample of tissue from a living subject to check under a microscope in order to determine the presence or extent of a cancer. Cancer can only be firmly ruled in or out by taking a tissue sample. Therefore, it is important for a biopsy to be taken prior to a diagnosis of cancer.
There are three kinds of biopsies: (i) incisional biopsy or core biopsy is when a sample of tissue is removed; (ii) a needle biopsy or fine-needle aspiration is when a sample of tissue or fluid is removed with a needle and (iii) an excisional biopsy is when a whole tumor or lesion is removed.